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Simone Weil is an outsider's saint. The daughter of an agnostic
French family of Jewish descent, Weil was never baptized ("God does
not want me in the Church," she wrote), and her conversion to Christianity
at the age of 23 took her by surprise. Until then, she had been a solemn,
committed leftist intellectual. Now she was moving toward a life of
divine encounters whose desolate ecstasy, as described by the journals,
letters, and essays excerpted in Waiting for God, bear comparison to
St. John of the Cross and Teresa of Avila. As Leslie Fiedler writes
in her introduction to Weil's book, "She speaks of the problems of belief
in the vocabulary of the unbeliever, of the doctrines of the Church
in the words of the unchurched." The book is most notable for Weil's
lengthy letter titled "Spiritual Autobiography" and for her "Meditation
on the Pater Noster," which is the discursive record of a spiritual
process that led to her almost daily attainment of a mystical vision
of God. This is not pretty writing; it is an agonized record of amazement.
--Michael Joseph Gross
From
the Publisher
"In an age of inspirational books without inspiration, her
writing is unmatched for surprising, sometimes shocking, spiritual insight."
--New
York Times
"Almost too important to be included in one's list of preferred reading
for one year only."
--T. S. Eliot